Why should you buy Child and Family Law Quarterly

Child and Family Law Quarterly (CFLQ) contains essential articles and comment on all aspects of family and child law and is available as an online (as part of LexisLibrary) or print subscription.

Edited by leading family law academics, supported by a distinguished editorial board and peer reviewed for excellence, this is an invaluable resource for all practitioners, academics and policy makers both in the UK and abroad.

It provides a unique multi-disciplinary forum for the publication of high quality research material, analysis and commentary and is at the very heart of the debate of all prominent developments in family law today.

It covers such matters as:

International family law

Child protection

Adoption

Child support

Family finance and property

Divorce reform

Education

Evidence

Human rights

Welfare benefits

Immigration issues

Parentage and parental responsibility

Subscribe to Child and Family Law Quarterly and receive:

In depth articles written by experts for all relevant disciplines

Detailed case commentaries on significant court decisions

Latest research findings discussed and analysed in cutting edge reports

Four issues a year discussing all important developments with a strong international dimension

Each issue also includes detailed commentaries on significant court decisions which will be invaluable to practitioners and academics alike.

"the final professional word for the practitioner in family and child law ... one of the leading authorities in Family Law both within the United Kingdom and internationally because the issues are often of global significance and application ... the value of “Child and Family Law Quarterly” lies in its depth, its currency and that special blend of both its practical and the academic aspects which give our professional advice just that extra bit of expertise to keep us at the top of our game ... a publication that you cannot afford to ignore today as the complexities of family law deepen with the necessary reforms which are taking place nationally and internationally… and you cannot afford to be without it!" Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor, Richmond Green Chambers

Editors: Gillian Douglas, Executive Dean, Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London Jonathan Herring, Professor of Law, Exeter College, University of Oxford Rebecca Probert, Professor of Law, University of Exeter

Case-Law Editor: Stephen Gilmore, Professor of Family Law, King’s College London

Assistant Editors: Jo Miles, Reader in Family Law & Policy, University of Cambridge Daniel Monk, Professor of Law, Birkbeck, University of London

Book Reviews Editor: Ruth Lamont, Senior Lecturer in Child and Family Law, University of Manchester

Editorial Board: Noel Arnold, Director of Legal Services, Coram Children’s Legal Centre; Rebecca Bailey-Harris, Barrister and Professor Emeritus, University of Bristol; Tim Bateman, Reader in Youth Justice, University of Bedfordshire; Lady Black, Justice of the Supreme Court; Luke Clemens, Professor of Law and Social Justice, Cardiff School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University; Jane Fortin, Emeritus Professor of Law, Sussex Law School, University of Sussex; Baroness Hale of Richmond, President of the Supreme Court; Mary Hayes, Emeritus Professor of Law, University of Sheffield; Joan Hunt, Honorary Professor, Cardiff School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University; Rosemary Hunter, Professor of and Socio-Legal Studies, School of Law, Queen Mary University of London; Nigel Lowe, Emeritus Professor, Cardiff School of Law and Politics, Cardiff University; Mr Justice MacDonald, Family Division, High Court; Mavis Maclean, Senior Research Fellow, University of Oxford; Sir James Munby, President of the Family Division; Neil Perot, Solicitor; Christine Piper, Emeritus Professor of Law, Brunel University